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The WikiLeaks founder will seek a pardon after accepting a charge under the US Espionage Act, according to his wife, Stella Assange
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With just over a week to go now is usually the time that voters start to engage with the campaign. But this year feels different, says Jim Waterson
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Kevin Craig, candidate for Central Suffolk and North Ipswich, suspended as Tories drop support for two hopefuls in election betting U-turn
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We would like to hear about your sightings of election posters and billboards in your local area
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Party says it can no longer support Craig Williams and Laura Saunders – who are under investigation over alleged bets
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Rishi Sunak was meant to clean up the Tory party. Instead he will leave it morally and ideologically exhausted, says Guardian columnist Gaby Hinsliff
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On a journey along the Thames – where fury at pollution has spawned a wave of local activism – it is clear that the decline of rivers is among this government’s worst legacies
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After Labour’s 2019 election defeat, Keir Starmer vowed to transform the party. Who are the advisers who have helped him shape it? Jessica Elgot reports
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With this tired format, the idea that anybody’s minds might be changed by anything that is said is a category error
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Prime minister says he fought against predecessor’s plans and warns of migration surge if Labour scraps Rwanda plan
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Yet again Rishi Sunak’s party has found a way to score an electoral own goal, this time with the still-unfolding betting scandal
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Editorial: If there were any doubts in voters’ minds about Rishi Sunak’s lack of leadership they have been wiped away by this sorry episode
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Rishi Sunak has heavily criticised comments from Nigel Farage that the west provoked Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Archie Bland reports
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Iain Duncan Smith and Tobias Ellwood make case for new rules as questions raised over £500 wager
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Yes, the Reform leader’s words were opportunistic. But at their root is a call for peace – and that should be on everyone’s minds, says Guardian columnist Simon Jenkins
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Activists and candidates sent to campaign for Cleverly, Dowden and Barclay, who all hold 20,000-plus majorities
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Climate experts and ministers say burying electricity cables could cost 10 times more than pylons
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An incoming Labour cabinet would have the advantage of not having to learn on the job, says political economist Andrew Hindmoor
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Rather than providing a check on the far right, the party opened the door to Faragism – and made his fantasies come true, says author Samuel Earle